Note spoilers! We are discussing important details about the ending of Brterist (currently open to theaters nationwide). Please be careful if you haven’t seen it yet.
It’s a destination, not a trip.
This is the impressive last line of Brterist, which was nominated for 10 categories, including the Work Award and the Best Actor Award (Adrian Brody) on Thursday. This feeling resonates with Brody (51), who played a fictional Hungarian Jewish architect named Larslow Tote in a epic after World War II.
“This is a very interesting and really beautiful observation,” says Brody. “A lot of sacrifice for artists to leave the work while enduring the journey is, so there is an appropriate destination for important destinations.”
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In the first half of the vast movie, Raslow moved to the United States after the Holocaust, and was asked to build a luxurious community center for Harrison Lee Van Buren (Guy Pierce), a cozy but coated person. Huh. A few decades later, the movie ends in Venice in 1980. There, Larslow, who suffers from illness, is celebrated in his retrospective exhibition. It revealed that Raslow had put a compliment to his family in a Trojan horse in a delicate building in a subtly designed building resembling a camp that was essentially imprisoned his family.
Blue Talist’s coach Brady Kobet and a joint writer and partner, Mona Fast Vold, talk about the song finale and that catchy endclet.
What is the meaning of the ending of “Brterist”?

“The Blue List” began with a shot of Sophia (Raffy Cassidi), a teenage niece who became an orphan of Raslow, and in the last scene, Sofia (Rafy Cassidi) played by Arian Labed as an adult. There is a reason to end with a shot. At an exhibition in Italy, she gives a speech to praise her uncle’s rebellious personal architecture.
“When talking about heritage, it’s not really the wonderful thing you create,” says Fast Vold. “It’s the love you left, the people you have opened up the way, in the case of Raslow. He was in the climax of his career, and he was quite sick. He lost his wife. But he is surrounded by his work and speaks on his behalf.
“The interesting thing about the movie is that it’s a love story,” said Fast Vold. “This (to his architecture) is ultimately an expression of love and processes his trauma. We reached the conclusion very early, but actually started writing. When I actually understood the character, it happened intuitively.

The film is a tribute to Ada, a young girl of a filmmaker who accompanied the Golden Globe Awards ceremony earlier this month.
“The project takes a lot of things from you. I don’t even remember what drove myself into such madness,” says Kobet. “At the end of my life, I don’t think what I am most proud of is my job. It will be our daughter.”
What is the last song of the movie “Brterist”?
“The Blue Talist” is a serious character movie, and gorgeous music by Daniel Branberg evokes both magnificent and fear. Therefore, it is surprising that the movie ends with La Biona’s 1978 disco anthem, one for you, One Four Me. This song is an enthusiastic love song and expresses unavoidable concessions as an artist. Raslow gave Harrison a community center, but also found a way to enhance it personally.
“I’m pretty cheeky,” Fast Vold talks about the song. “It is really fun to give the audience a shock of the energy.”
Initially, they considered using STOP! From 1988.
“This is about reconnection, and it is also a post -disco song at the time,” says Kobet. “But for a variety of reasons,” ONE for You, One for Me “won, and La Bionda is a band in Italian and the film ends in Italy, but the interesting thing is Eraja and Deepesh mode. The co -founder, Vince Clark, cooperated with Daniel in the synth version score that was actually heard in Venice.

What will happen to Raslow Tote (Adrian Brody) of Blue Talist?

Most of the movies depict an uneasy relationship between Raslow and Harrison, but Harrison looks down on Jewish immigrants, but is not frank. In a scene where the stomach hurts in the latter half of the movie, Harrison raps a drunk raslow that has spit and falls down in the alley.
“The assault is purely related to jealousy and power,” says Fast Vold. “Harrison is not satisfied just to own art, and wants to own an artist.” In the early scene, “Guy and Adrian have a very exciting and wonderful chemical reaction, which is interesting. But from the viewpoint of the writer, it is not about a control. “
After the assault, Raslow got angry, closed his heart and retreated inward. He finally confesses to Elga Bet, and Elgevet goes to Harrison’s house and confronts Harrison in front of his family and colleagues.
“It was important to betray the audience’s expectations,” Kobet says. “This is a movie about Raslow, but he appears for the last 30 minutes. It is his wife who is too shy and fights for him.” In the opening scene, she was in the war. It is presumed that he has been sexually assaulted many times, but finally she has experienced “she has a healthier relationship with her trauma.” He doesn’t handle himself at all. “